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Friday, 5 June 2015

Tricky GCSE maths exam sees pupils take to Twitter

A tricky GCSE maths question stumped thousands of students - but inspired them to take to Twitter to vent their anger and frustration.

The equation in Thursday's Edexcel exam was on the probability of taking two orange sweets from a bag.

By the afternoon the topic was trending on Twitter and online petitions were set up calling on the board to lower the grade boundaries when marking.

Edexcel's owner Pearson said it aimed to "test the full range" of abilities.

But it said it would ensure students were "treated fairly" when the papers are marked.

Some pupils complained the sweets question appeared to be of a higher standard to those in past papers they had used to revise.

One student, writing on the Change.org petition website, said: "All past papers were similar in a way and they are the resources that were that were used by students all through the country to help them with this paper... a lot of people have done badly and would appreciate a retake of a new test or lower grade boundaries."

On Twitter, teenagers who sat the exam across England said they felt all was going well until they began the second paper in the maths non-calculator exam.

The question that attracted the most comments was about a girl called Hannah taking a sweet from a bag at random, and the students were asked to prove the equation: "Show that n²-n-90=0".

But others also highlighted questions where they were asked about the cheapest plants at a garden centre, and the volume of two pieces of cheese as being particularly difficult.

Some of the students are also about to sit an Edexcel statistics paper and they took to Twitter again later to speculate on whether it would prove as challenging.

A Pearson spokesperson said: "Our exam papers are designed by an experienced team of expert teachers with a deep understanding of the subject matter.

"They make sure our papers are set at the appropriate level to test the full range of students' abilities.

"In the event that any one paper turns out to be more or indeed less challenging than usual, our marking and grading process always ensures students are awarded the grades they deserve."